There are credible reports substantiating the claim that Iran finances Sunni terrorist groups. These groups have harmed international public opinion of Sunni states by their acts of terror and criminality, which has justified acts against their populations. Supporters of Iran actively exploited the term wahabism to split the Sunnis; while they were unable to win over the population, they were successful in misrepresenting their views in the West. In actuality, none of the Sunni governments are under the control of extremist groups like the IS, the Taliban, or al-Qaida. In the Sunni nations, these criminals have not gained a single seat by public mandate; in contrast, clerics and Hezbollah allies control Iran through popular mandate. This represents the extreme religious views of the fewer than 1% of Muslims worldwide who support Iran out of a total of 23%. Nonetheless, many asna e ashri in the shia community, as well as ismailis and agha khanis, favor western ideas and reject Iranian policy. Conflict between civilizations has resulted from incorrect beliefs held by certain groups, especially some Sunnis, based on a misreading of Islamic doctrine. In peacetime, it has been encouraged to misquote passages from the sacred texts that refer to war in order to foment division among those civilizations and specifically target Western cultures. The Iranian clerics’ goal of reestablishing the old Persian Empire is an effort to use terror networks to destabilize the whole Middle East. Understandably, a new piece of information surfaces claiming that isis was the product of an Iranian clandestine campaign to discredit and overthrow anti-Sunni governments in Iran by tricking the West. Other than the IS, the ongoing Russian bombardment of opposition regions in Syria are the first indication of a covert campaign by the Sunni community’s mutual foes, a Western ally in Chechnya and Xinjiang. In all of recorded history, there has never been a single instance in which the Sunnis did not form a Western alliance to combat rogue regimes. Additionally, a number of asna e ashris, ismailis, and agha khanis from the Shia community oppose the Iranian government. It is not Israel but rather Iran that stands in the way of peace and the establishment of a Palestinian state. It is the rift that the Iranians’ creation of Hamas among the Arabs of Palestine. The interest in Palestinian statehood has been harmed by the financial and logistical assistance given to Hamas over the years. The Iranian dictatorship has harmed the United States’ goal of a two-state solution coexisting peacefully in the Middle East. Every time peace talks made headway, the Iranians used devious tactics to provoke the Hamas into firing missiles at Tel Aviv, targeting innocent people. This led to Israeli defense forces retaliating, which ultimately ended in a humanitarian disaster. Then, by burning American flags and providing financial backing for large-scale campaigns against American interests in those nations, the Iranians distorted the situation on the streets of the Islamic world. The Iranians’ public engagement initiatives met expectations. It takes learning to overcome their strategies. Finding Iranian assets that are active on both sides of the conflict is essential. In non-Arab Sunni nations like Pakistan, this means maintaining a firm hold over the news media. This aids kids in developing opinions on the option they have chosen. The underlying problem is the bombing and murdering of Sunnis in Syria and Iran’s expansionist plans to destroy Arab Sunni governments, which is bolstered by Russian resentment towards its Chechen Sunnis and Chinese hostility towards the 20 million Sunni Uighurs who oppose the communist system. In summary, the combined effort of Russia, Iran, and China is predicated on the idea that my enemy is my friend. Would this function? Oh no, why? Peace is the ultimate victory; no side in a fight can win a war. and winning the hearts and minds of the populace is necessary to bring about peace. For a long time to come, it will be an American success to keep them interested. In addition to maintaining US economic dominance on a worldwide scale, this will harm their economy since 20% of the world’s population is Sunni. China is encouraging instability in Xinjiang among its 20 million Sunni population, including the nearby Gilgit in Pakistan, while Russia is escalating hostility among its own Sunni minority in Chechnya. China will be destroyed by any clandestine western operation if it decides to intervene in the Syrian Civil War. regardless of how unsettling it may be, it continues to exist as a reality in the Syrian Civil War with more extensive involvement in the Middle East. After reaching a nuclear disarmament agreement, Iran has revealed her true intentions, but this will cost her dearly in the days to come. It’s time for Hamas to wake up, and Israel should use more tactful diplomacy to take advantage of the current circumstances and establish contacts with the Arab world in order to achieve a lasting peace. There are 100% Arabs and 100% Sunnis around Israel. We should take advantage of the chance the Middle East presents for our future generations to have a prosperous future. I propose holding a Middle East meeting at the Vatican under the present pope, bringing together the Jewish state, the Arabs, and the United States as guarantors of accords with a new, peacefully residing Palestinian state. Let’s hope for a Middle East that is safer. Iran has no interest in supporting the Arabs of Palestine or Israel. Arabs in Palestine are exclusively Sunnis. Please understand this. and Iran need to give from interfering in Arab-Palestinian affairs. The longer the United States is successful in keeping Russia and Iran involved in Syria, the more harm will be done to them. The United States is about to win this war. They would all be unable to recuperate from this never-ending conflict. Ultimately, in contrast to past actions, the 85% of Muslims of Sunni descent will go out on the streets in support of the United States. However, cautious public diplomacy is required. Iranian strategy: Iran would use clandestine measures to win over the ignorant masses of the Sunni nations by dragging Israel into the Syrian issue. Can someone comment on Iran’s state-sponsored terrorism? 1. A humane society cannot justify the atrocity of murdering 20,000 people in Syria in order to retain 11% minority tyranny. Would you give it your blessing? ref. read the August 1, 1982, Daily Guardian 2. The Times of India said in July 2012 that the New Delhi Police had determined that the attackers on February 13, 2012, were terrorists affiliated with the Iranian Revolutionary Guards, a division of the Iranian military. Remember that this was done to malign Pakistani Isis. 3. According to the US State Department, Iran backs Hezbollah and Hamas. 4. mahmoud abbas, president of the palestinian national authority, has said, hamas is funded by iran. 5. involvement of iranian revolutionary guards corps quds force commander qasem suleimani in found involved in arming and training of both sunni and shi’ite militias in iraq. does this lead us to draw findings of a covert iranian support to isil? 6. aggrey adoli, kenya’s police chief in kenya’s coastal region, said on 22 june 2012 that two iranians, ahmad abolfathi mohammad and sayed mansour mousavi, believed to be members of iran’s revolutionary guards’ quds force, were arrested and suspected of being involved in terrorism. 7. uganda, ethiopia, and kenya all expressed concern with ayalon regarding iran’s attempts to increase terror activity in africa. 8. after the 2001 invasion of afghanistan, iran evacuated hundreds of al qaeda personnel from afghanistan, allowing the formation of an al qaeda management council on the iranian soil. 9. the u.s. indictment of bin laden filed in 1998 stated that al-qaeda forged alliances . ….with the Iranian government and the terrorist organization Hezbollah, in order to collaborate against their alleged shared adversaries. 10. in line with seth g. According to Jones and Peter Bergen, there seems to have been Iranian cooperation in the planning of the 2003 riyadh complex attacks by al-Qaeda agents in Iran. Iran’s listing on the State Department’s list of states that fund terrorism dates back to 1984, providing evidence of its connection to terrorism. Iran is supporting Hamas, Hezbollah, Palestinian Islamic Jihad, the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine-General Command, the Syrian regime (also considered a state sponsor of terrorism), the Houthi rebels in Yemen, Shiite militants in Bahrain, and Shiite militias in Iraq, according to the 2013 country reports on terrorism. Despite their stated animosity against one another, the state department verified that Iran still collaborates with al-Qaeda forces. Iran remained unwilling to bring senior al-Qaeda (AQ) members to justice, it said. It persisted in holding those top members in captivity while refusing to reveal their identities to the public. Aq was able to transfer fighters and money to both Syria and South Asia because to Iran’s permission for its facilitators, Muhsin Al-Fadhli and Adel Radi Saq Al-wahabi Al-Harbi, to run a main facilitation pipeline via the country. Al-fadhli is a seasoned aq operator with years of experience. Al-fadhli was detained by Iranian officials after he started working with the country’s AQ Facilitation Network in 2009. After being freed in 2011, he took over as the head of the Iran-based AQ facilitation network. Iran runs a worldwide network that includes locations in the United States and South America. Iran has a intelligence and terrorist network in Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay, Uruguay, Chile, Colombia, Guyana, Trinidad and Tobago, Suriname, and other countries, according to a 500-page study released in may 2013 by the state prosecutor of Argentina. Iran has stepped up its operations in Africa, according to the State Department. It is also well known that Iran and North Korea collaborate closely on projects related to WMDs. It is thought that the IRGC is present in Sudan, another country that sponsors terrorism, where it is in charge of an armaments supply line to Hamas. Iran’s link with Al-Qaeda: Despite their differing ideologies, the administrations of Bush, Obama, and Clinton all concurred that Iran backs terrorists affiliated with Al-Qaeda. Three IRGCC officials and one IRGCC associate were sanctioned by the Treasury Department in February 2014 for their support of the Taliban and their participation in assaults in Afghanistan. Additionally, since he helped al-Qaeda from Iranian soil, the U.S. government banned Jafar Al-Uzbeki, an agent of Olimzhon Adkhamovich Sadikov. Sadikov is a member of the Islamic Jihad Union, an al-Qaeda offshoot with its headquarters located in Mashhad, Iran. He helps radicals, including members of al-Qaeda, get travel papers to and from Pakistan and Afghanistan. Additionally, he gathers funds for the larger al-Qaeda network in Iran, which is then used to fund branches like Jabhat Al-Nusra in Syria. The U.S. Treasury Department sanctioned Muhsin Al-Fadhil, the head of the Al-Qaeda pipeline in Iran, and Muhsin Al-Fadhil, who oversee the organization’s critically important iran-based funding and facilitation network, in October 2012. He was imprisoned when he landed in Iran in 2009. He succeeded Yasin Al-Suri as the pipeline’s management following his release in 2011. •Al-radi Saqr Al-wahabi Al-Harbi, who serves as Al-fadhil’s deputy, joined the Iran-based network in the beginning of 2011. He is in charge of al-Qaeda militants traveling from Iran to Afghanistan and Iraq. Six al-Qaeda members were sanctioned by the US Treasury Department in July 2011. These individuals were linked to an al-Qaeda core pipeline centered in Iran, which allowed the organization to transfer resources and manpower between the Middle East and South Asia. The agents included Yasin Al-Suri, who has represented al-Qaeda in Iran since 2005. He negotiates the release of al-Qaeda inmates jailed in Iran and supervises the flow of funds and recruits via Iran. • Atiyah abd al-rahman, the former envoy of al-Qaeda to Iran and current general commander in the tribal regions of Pakistan. • Umid Muhammadi, an al-Qaeda trainer and facilitator working in Iraq. He has asked for the release of al-Qaeda members who are in detention by using his contacts with the Iranian administration. • Salam Hasan Khalifa Rashid Al-Kuwari, who is situated in Qatar and assists the Al-Qaeda agents in Iran with travel and financial transactions. •Abdallah ghanim mafuz Muslim al-khawar, who is headquartered in Qatar and provides the commanders of al-Qaeda in Iran with cash, supplies, and other stuff. Additionally, he arranges for terrorists to travel. • Yasin Al-Suri collaborates with Kuwaiti-born Ali Hasan ‘ali Al-Ajmi. He gives money and travel support to the Taliban, al-Qaeda in Iraq, and al-Qaeda in general. According to the U.S. Treasury news release, by exposing iran’s secret deal with al-qaeda, allowing it to funnel funds and operatives through its territory, we are illuminating yet another aspect of iran’s unmatched support for terrorism. Four al-Qaeda members with ties to Iran were sanctioned by the Treasury Department in January 2009. They were: • Mustafa Hamid, who in the middle of the 1990s negotiated a secret relationship between Usama Bin Laden and Iran to enable Al-Qaeda militants to travel throughout the nation. He served as a go-between for the Taliban, al-Qaeda, and the Iranian government. In 2003, he was held captive in Iran. Ayman Al-Zawahiri, the current head of al-Qaeda, has a reliable assistant in Muhammad Rab’a Al-Said Al-Bhattiyti. He made arrangements for Zawawi’s daughters to visit Iran after the 9/11 attacks. In 2003, he was held captive in Iran. • Ali Saleh Hussein, who managed the al-Qaeda militants’ flight to Iran after the 9/11 attacks. 2003 saw him imprisoned as well. •Saad bin Laden, Osama Bin Laden’s son, managed his family’s relocation to Iran after the 9/11 attacks. He was arrested in 2003 and contributed to the management of Al-Qaeda from Iran. According to reports, he was permitted to depart Iran in September 2008. In 2009, he lost his life in a drone strike in Pakistan. Plots against the United States have been linked to the Iranian al-Qaeda network. Two people connected to the network were detained in Canada in April 2013 while attempting to blow up a train traveling from New York to Toronto. According to James Malizia, an officer with the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, al qaeda elements located in Iran were providing support to the individuals. There is no evidence to suggest that these assaults were authorized by the state. Iran and al-Qaeda have been associated since the early 1990s. Iran consented in late 1991–1992 to help al-Qaeda carry out operations against mutual foes, namely the United States and Israel, according to the 9/11 commission report. Senior gang members were trained in explosives within Iran. In 1993, Iranian agents trained a second batch of al-Qaeda fighters in Lebanon. The 9/11 commission concluded that sunni-shi’a divisions did not necessarily pose an insurmountable barrier to cooperation in terrorist operations, citing the link between al-Qaeda and Iran as evidence. The two parties maintained communication throughout the 1990s. Iran intended to strengthen the ties after al-Qaeda’s 2000 assault on the USS Cole in Yemen. According to the 9/11 report, bin Laden passed up the chance because he was concerned it would sour relations with Saudi Arabia. Note: The author is a firm believer in religious concord amongst Christians, Jews, Muslims (Shia and Sunnis), and everyone else. In addition, he thinks that faiths shouldn’t be a justification for dividing people. This article denounces actions by Iranians that show prejudice against adherents of other religions. It’s not at all anti-sectarian. Regardless of sectarian prejudice, it condemns terrorist networks in the same way. The author proposes that the US-led policies be supported and the Iranian ones rejected by the whole Ismaili community, the Agha Khani community, and many Asna e Ashrafies. citations: reference 1 (http://www.clarionproject.org/factsheet/iranian-state-support-terrorism#); reference 2 (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/iran_and_state-sponsored_terrorism) – articles on Pakistan and the relationship between the United States and Pakistan. Russia, Iran, Syria, India, Pakistan,

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